Google Analytics 4 is an analytics service that enables you to measure traffic and engagement across your websites and apps. Google Analytics Universal will stop collecting data on July 1, 2021 (and be sunsetted by the end of the year), at which point GA4 will be the only analytics property available through Google. Our recommendation? Set up your GA4 account now so you can have more data to work from when making digital marketing decisions. This will help in becoming more familiar with the interface, and you’ll have much more data to work from.
GA4 is designed for the future of online measurement:
Appearance-wise, GA4 was created to be simpler. The dashboard looks different, and the data looks different too. More than that, the collection and modeling methods (and priorities) have shifted for Google Analytics in GA4:
GA4 collects both app and website data and uses events instead of session-based data. This means you’ll want to rethink your data in terms of page views rather than what happens within the session. Additionally, Google asserts that you’ll be able to see better distribution of data because it’s being reliably collected across devices and platforms.
You can set up your specific type of conversion and track the way you want. For example, if you want to see whether your web visitor is going to their shopping cart and then checking out, or if they watch a video and then call you, you can track those visitor pathways.
Additionally, two more big changes come with GA4:
It’s important to note: the results from Google Analytics Universal vs. GA4 will not look the same. Because of the differences (particularly in measurement/tracking) mentioned above, the results will definitely be different—so don’t panic when your page views don’t line up. For example, you might see a higher user count (active user data) for GA4 vs. Google Analytics Universal. Or, session counts may look lower because they’re being counted differently. You simply can’t compare your reports in Google Analytics Universal against your GA4 reports because they’re not apples to apples—Google is measuring things differently.